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Modernising diagnostic medical microbiology services

Modernising diagnostic medical microbiology services. Professor Brian I. Duerden CBE,MD Emeritus Professor of Medical Microbiology, Cardiff University. Inspector of Microbiology - 2003. Champion & promote high quality clinical & public health microbiology

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Modernising diagnostic medical microbiology services

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  1. Modernising diagnostic medical microbiology services Professor Brian I. Duerden CBE,MD Emeritus Professor of Medical Microbiology, Cardiff University

  2. Inspector of Microbiology - 2003 • Champion & promote high quality clinical & public health microbiology • all labs in NHS contribute to surveillance • promote standards & quality • identify gaps in specialist & reference micro. • achieve adherence to SOPs • protocols to reduce the risk of loss/misuse • compliance with security and health & safety

  3. Vision and Goal - 2004An integrated and cohesive, quality assured microbiology and virology service to support clinical care of patients with infection and for health protection.

  4. …….2011 • Microbiology and Virology service • Infection Service • Health Protection • Public Health

  5. Slow progress….why? • Pathology modernisation • 2005 visits and report • highly variable but little concrete action • Carter review and pilots • HPA establishment • Hiatus for public health microbiology 2003-7 • HCAI prominence • MRSA and C. difficile targets • Intense effort • 30 years in the “backroom”

  6. Microbiology & Infection Control New antibiotics New societies New journals New guidelines New diseases Infection control was the province of the IC specialists Modern medicine Increased life expectancy Cancer treatment Immunosuppression Complex surgery Cardiac Neurosurgery Orthopaedic Chronic illnesses Infection – a nuisance Parting of the ways 1970 - 90

  7. Increasing HCAI MRSA Clostridium difficile Acinetobacter Norovirus Antimicrobial resistance ESBL Pandemic threats Need for microbiology!! Decreasing Training numbers Academic input Reduced medical student impact Effect of RAE Dislocation of academic/service interface Training in asepsis Supply of microbiologists!! 1990s – the backroom days

  8. BUT…….. ….we did not help ourselves

  9. Perceived dogmas • Laboratory focused • What about patient focus? • Individual clinical pathology disciplines • A lab in every main hospital/trust • Transport too difficult – delays • Lab headed by medical microbiologist • Medical microbiologists based in labs • Unwilling to have cover from a distance • Daytime (8.30 – 17.30) service • On-call out of hours

  10. Results • Traditional methods • Lack of investment in • new technology, IT • Lack of specialisation • Isolated services

  11. Where do we go from here?

  12. Coalition Government & NHS reorganisation • Infection (prevention &control) is a priority • Commissioning by GP Consortia • Need for support and guidance • Potential role for revised National Standards for Microbiology (standard methods) with Professional bodies’ ownership • Public Health Service • Within DH • National and local components • Incorporates HPA functions (incl. labs) • How will Public Health Microbiology be delivered?

  13. Post-Carter developments • Various models – same aims • Consolidation, centralisation • Enable technology development • Automation - conventional tests; new technology • Molecular, post-genomic – sequencing, micro-array, MALDI-TOF • Concentrate staff expertise • Extended (24/7) working • Cost effectiveness ………maintain the quality of patient care and public health support

  14. Public Health responsibility • HPA (Public Health England) • Public health, specialist, reference microbiology • Clinical/diagnostic laboratories • NHS or commissioned • Surveillance reporting • Notifiable diseases • Outbreak identification and support • Standardised methods for infections of public health importance

  15. Communicable diseases legislation • 2010 Act – Notifiable diseases • Requires all diagnostic laboratories to report isolates of pathogens with Public Health significance • Much longer list • In addition to medical practitioners reporting clinical cases • Expectation of accreditation and use of standard methods • 2008 Code of Practice for HCAI • Requires microbiology support from an accredited laboratory

  16. Technology developments • Automation • Conventional tests • Molecular, post-genomic • Which technologies • Next generation sequencing • Micro-arrays • MALDI-TOf • ?????? …we need a strategy for their use

  17. UKCRC - TIRI • Oxford • Application of sequencing to diagnostic and public health microbiology; eg, HCAIs • Imperial • Changing the culture and embedding HCAI prevention & control in healthcare services • Linked to modern diagnostics for HCAI epidemiology • St Georges • POC molecular testing and mobile communication modules for STI • Cambridge • Sequencing developments for MRSA and web-based systems for analysing data generated remotely

  18. POC testing • Healthcare settings • ICU • MRSA screening in A&E etc …need to be integrated with laboratory service • “High Street”settings • Increase accessibility for patients/clients • Professional oversight? Interpretation? Advice? • Links to patient record? • Risks loss of surveillance data for public health …Microbiologists need to be involved in pilot projects

  19. Transforming medical specialist training • Medical roles of infection specialists • Clinical patient care • Consultation/advice • What investigations? • Interpretation of results • Antimicrobial treatment • Epidemiology • Infection prevention and control • Common training pathway • Core infection training • Clinical care, diagnostic & public Health microbiology/virology , infection prevention & control

  20. Challenges for the future • Keep infection as a patient safety priority in healthcare • It will never go away! • Use modern technology to deliver a patient-focused service • Do not repeat the mistakes of 1970 - 2000

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